When Gianluigi Donnarumma speaks about Kylian Mbappé, he does so from a position of genuine firsthand experience. The two shared a dressing room at Paris Saint-Germain, and Donnarumma faced him in training more times than he can count. So when the Manchester City goalkeeper acknowledged that Mbappé’s absence from the first leg of their Champions League tie against Real Madrid represents an advantage, the assessment carried real weight.
Mbappé missed training ahead of the match and was confirmed unavailable for the first leg. For context, the French forward is the competition’s top scorer this season with 13 goals and delivered a hat-trick against City in a previous playoff tie. His absence removes one of the most dangerous attacking threats in world football from the equation, at least for one night.
Donnarumma was candid about what that means from a goalkeeper’s perspective. Not facing a player of Mbappé’s caliber, he said, can be an advantage and would mean less work to do between the posts. It was a refreshingly honest assessment from a player who understands better than anyone the kind of problems the forward creates for opposing goalkeepers.
A warning wrapped inside the optimism
Donnarumma was careful not to let the positive framing around Mbappé’s absence lull anyone into a false sense of security. He was quick to point out that the players stepping in to replace Mbappé are still champions in their own right and will demand full attention and respect. Real Madrid, he noted, remain dangerous regardless of who is or is not available on any given night.
His remarks about the Santiago Bernabéu added another layer of caution. Playing at one of football’s most storied venues requires more than tactical preparation. Donnarumma emphasized the need for emotional control, describing the Bernabéu as an environment that is simply not suited for everyone. Real Madrid, he said, belong there and their players know it, which makes them a different proposition on home soil even when they have been inconsistent during the regular run of play.
A club that demands and rewards hunger
Donnarumma’s broader point about Real Madrid touched on what makes the Spanish giants perpetually dangerous in knockout competition. The Champions League, he argued, is a different kind of contest from domestic football, one where a team’s pedigree and appetite for the big occasion matter as much as recent form. Real Madrid, with all their experience in this competition, will arrive at the first leg hungry to build a platform for the second leg regardless of any absences.
That framing created an interesting tension in Donnarumma’s overall message. On one hand, he identified a genuine and specific advantage in Mbappé sitting out. On the other, he repeatedly returned to the theme that Madrid are never truly diminished and that the margin for error across two legs is razor thin.
Six months into a new chapter at City
Donnarumma joined Manchester City in the summer and has spent six months settling into life at the Etihad Stadium. From that vantage point, he expressed confidence that City are genuine contenders to lift the Champions League trophy this season while acknowledging that many teams across the competition remain capable of going all the way.
He framed the knockout stage as a contest where every single detail can make the difference, a perspective that reflects both the opportunity Mbappé’s absence creates and the respect he clearly still holds for the opponent standing across from City in the tie. The first leg at the Bernabéu will begin to answer which side of that tension ultimately proves more telling.
Source: FilmoGaz

